2012 Bolivarian Beach Games

I Boilivarian Beach Games

Official logo of the

Lima 2012 Bolivarian Beach Games.

Host city Lima
Nations participating 10
Athletes participating 1500
Events 15
Opening ceremony November 1
Closing ceremony November 11
Officially opened by Patricia Salas[1]
Athlete's Oath Cristóbal de Col[2]
Bolivarian Torch Sofía Mulanovich[2]
Stadium Manuel Bonilla

The 2012 Bolivarian Beach Games, officially the I Bolivarian Beach Games, is an international multi-sport event that is being held from November 1–11, 2012 in Lima, Peru. With approximately 1,500 athletes from 10 nations participating in 15 sports. The Bolivarian Beach are organized by the ODEBO, the Bolivarian Sports Organization.

The 2012 Bolivarian Beach Games saw the participation of Chile for the first time as a Bolivarian team, Chile had joined ODEBO not long before the games. The event also was the first time ODEBO invited not-bolivarian countries to join the 7 registered countries.[3]

The Games

Opening ceremony

The opening ceremony of the games took place on November 1, 2012, at 8:00 pm Peruvian Standard Time (-05:00 UTC) at Manuel Bonilla Stadium.[4]

Participating teams

All 6 members of ODEBO competed at the Games plus the 4 invited members from PASO for a total of 10 countries.[3]

ODEBO Members

Invited nations

Sports

Calendar

OCOpening ceremony Event competitions 1Event finals EGExhibition gala CCClosing ceremony
November 1st
Thu
2nd
Fri
3rd
Sat
4th
Sun
5th
Mon
6th
Tue
7th
Wed
8th
Thu
9th
Fri
10th
Sat
11th
Sun
Events
Ceremonies OC CC
Beach handball 2 2
Beach rugby 2 2
Beach soccer 1 1
Beach tennis 5 5
Beach volleyball 2 2
Canoeing 3 3 6
Open water swimming 2 2 4
Rowing 4 4 8
Sailing 3 1 4 8
Freediving 2 2 1 5
Surf 1 1 6 8
Triathlon 3 3
Waterskiing 6 4 10
Total Events 2 0 8 10 9 9 3 4 3 9 7 64
Cumulative Total 2 2 10 20 29 38 41 45 48 57 64
November 1st
Thu
2nd
Fri
3rd
Sat
4th
Sun
5th
Mon
6th
Tue
7th
Wed
8th
Thu
9th
Fri
10th
Sat
11th
Sun
Events

Medal table

1 Host nation
Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  Peru1 21 12 13 46
2  Venezuela 19 11 10 40
3  Chile 11 16 12 39
4  Ecuador 6 13 8 27
5  Colombia 2 6 6 14
6  Paraguay 2 2 5 9
7  Guatemala 2 1 4 7
8  El Salvador 1 3 3 7
9  Dominican Republic 0 0 3 3
10  Bolivia 0 0 0 0

Medal table reflecting the final results as of November 11, 2012.[18]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 2/24/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.